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Stryker Corp. v. National Union Fire Insurance Co.

6th CircuitNovember 18, 2016No. 15-1657/1664Cited 22 times

Case Details

Judge(s)
Cole, Batchelder, Cook
Status
Published
Procedural Posture
appeal
Circuit
6th Circuit

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The Sixth Circuit reversed the district court's summary judgment for Stryker, finding the excess liability insurance policy was unambiguous and that TIG had no obligation to cover settlements made without its written consent.

What This Ruling Means

**Stryker Corp. v. National Union Fire Insurance Co. - Court Ruling Summary** This case was about an insurance dispute between Stryker Corporation and National Union Fire Insurance Company (TIG). Stryker had an excess liability insurance policy with TIG and made settlements in employment-related lawsuits without getting TIG's written permission first. Stryker then asked TIG to cover the settlement costs, but TIG refused, saying the policy required their written consent before any settlements were made. The court sided with the insurance company. The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed an earlier decision that favored Stryker, ruling that the insurance policy language was clear and unambiguous. Since Stryker settled the employment cases without getting TIG's written consent as required by their policy, TIG had no legal obligation to pay for those settlements. For workers, this ruling highlights an important indirect concern about how employment disputes get resolved. When companies have insurance coverage for employment lawsuits, insurance policy terms can affect how willing employers are to settle cases. If insurers can refuse coverage when settlements are made without their approval, it might influence how quickly or fairly workplace disputes get resolved, potentially affecting workers involved in employment-related legal claims.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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